New York – John Lithgo is returning to a play in Broadway, which can change the way we read gold stories for our children.
The two -time Tony Award winner “Vishal” will star as Ronald Dahl, who examines the allegations of antisementism against “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” Mattida “and” James and the Giant Peach “.
“You go back after watching the game and read their writing, and you see dark stress in it, which you knew that you were there.” “But when you watch this drama you see it in a different light.”
“Giant” by director-turn-play-plays mark Rosynb, won the Olivier Award earlier this year for Best New Play in London and earned his first Olivier to Lithgo. Performance begins in New York on 11 March.
Set in the same afternoon at the Dahal Family Home in the summer of 1983, “Vishal” presented the author on the eve of the publication of his book “The Vichass”.
He is being forced to face resentment after making antisementary comments and Dahl is being forced to make public forgiveness or select between raising his name and reputation. Jewish representatives of Dahl’s British and American publishers visit their home to perform a course.
Says Lithgo, “He was a favorite writer for very good reasons, and it was really only after his death that this information about his antisemitism came to mind. He spared the era of canceled culture.”
The drama will come to New York amid allegations of antisemitism on war in Gaza, which will cancel questions about the cancellation of culture and the location of politics in children’s literature.
“This is not a drama that wants to tell people what to think. It just invites people to think,” Rosenblatt says, which was inspired to write “giant” after learning antisemitism at Britain’s labor party.
“This is a drama about a complex person, a complex person who has created some great treasures of my childhood and whose work I still read my children,” Roserbat. “I think it is asking people to keep two truths in their heads at the same time in some ways.”
The drama premiered at the Royal Court Theater before shifting to the West End. It is directed by Nicolas Hetner and features the design set by Bob Crole.
Variety called it “a powerhouse play, whose time has been the most of the time.” The Times was equally enthusiastically: “We are likely to watch a more exciting drama in the West end this year?
Lithgow – Who is also a children’s book writer and writes songs for children – these days is deep in children’s literature. In addition to “huge”, he has also signed to play Albus dumbldor in HBO’s “Harry Potter” TV series.
“It is a kind of extraordinary that I have finished playing these two characters in such a moment,” they say. “So here I am doing a difference on a subject.”
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